ABSTRACT

Jia Zhangke is praised as “the most internationally prominent and celebrated figure of the Six-Generation of Chinese filmmakers”. This book provides an examination the content and forms of Jia’s featured films and analyzes their merits and faults.

Jia’s films often narrate the lives of ordinary Chinese people against the backdrop of the political-economic changes. The author conducts an in-depth analysis of how this change have ferociously impinged upon the characters’ living conditions since China integrated itself with the world economy in the high tide of accelerated globalization since the 1970s. The author focuses on discussing the “politics of dignity” expressed by Jia’s allegorical renditions to explore the director’s political unconsciousness and cultural-political notions.

This book maps ten of Jia Zhangke’s films onto three major themes: Jia’s filmmaking and China in the market society; truth claims and political unconscious; “post-socialist modernity” in the age of globalization. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of Chinese film studies, as well as other disciplines, such as political science, sociology, anthropology, etc.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

A lyricist of China’s “postsocialist modernity” in the age of neoliberal transformation

part 17I|56 pages

chapter 1|18 pages

Recording human affection within social transmutation

Portrayal of early reform China in Platform (2000)

chapter 2|19 pages

Morality and love in post-revolutionary China

A pickpocket’s being and nothingness in Xiao Wu (1997)

chapter 3|16 pages

Hedonism and nihilism in the consumerist wasteland

Unknown Pleasures (2002) as a fable of drifters in a market society

part 123III|65 pages

chapter 7|22 pages

Orchestrating workers’ memories and Chinese national history

24 City (2008) as a fake documentary

chapter 8|23 pages

A postmodern narrative of historical fragments and elitist historicism

On the fiction and reality in I Wish I Knew (2010)

chapter 9|18 pages

“China consciousness” in the age of globalization and its shortage

Mountains May Depart (2015) as a postmodern film

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

The cultural politics of the “poetics of vanishing”